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Migration in the Digital Age
Explores how mobile media has changed the migration experience, focusing on Central American migration to the United States, which represents the largest migratory corridor in the world. The book analyzes the socio-technical affordances of smartphones and examines the communication practices that migrants engage in while utilizing mobile media. It demonstrates the mutual influence between media technologies and human mobility.
The primary objective is to illustrate, through firsthand accounts from migrants, how technology has transformed migration trends and experiences, as well as how the migrant community has shaped the utilization of technology. A key contribution of this work is highlighting the agency and creativity that migrants exercise when interacting with media technology, as they establish their own practices and rituals to meet their needs.
Through a diverse range of ethnographic data, interviews, maps, and images, it demonstrates that contemporary migration is a mediated experience. The narrative begins by exploring how smartphones influence and shape the decision to migrate, the journey itself, experiences during transit and navigation, as well as life in migrant shelters and within the diaspora.

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Media & Internet, Media studies: internet, digital media and society, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Electronics / Digital, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Telecommunications, Migration, immigration and emigration, Sociology

Introduction
Chapter 1: The Departure: Mobile Media and the Drive to Migrate
Chapter 2: Hybrid Mobility: Undertaking on the Migrant Journey with the Smartphone
Chapter 3: Mobile Media Technology, Connectivity, and Life at the Migrant Shelters
Chapter 4: The Arrival: Mobile Media and Life in the Diaspora
Conclusion: Hybrid Migration: On the Techno-Politics and Architecture of Movement